Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 54232 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 man 4 work 3 Mr. 3 London 3 England 2 William 2 Telford 2 Tam 2 Stephenson 2 States 2 Rome 2 Millet 2 Liverpool 2 John 2 Herschel 2 Gibson 2 George 2 Garfield 2 Edward 2 CHAPTER 2 Bath 1 worker 1 woman 1 time 1 republican 1 poor 1 people 1 party 1 old 1 look 1 little 1 life 1 labour 1 know 1 irish 1 increase 1 hand 1 great 1 english 1 democratic 1 day 1 country 1 class 1 british 1 York 1 Wigan 1 West 1 Virginia 1 United 1 Union Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1441 man 785 land 778 labour 772 time 751 people 750 year 708 day 579 work 555 country 511 life 469 power 455 child 435 woman 430 world 417 thing 391 system 380 place 370 class 338 trade 329 cotton 323 slave 312 hand 307 town 306 market 304 part 292 way 288 population 276 family 275 price 274 house 269 food 268 home 266 party 266 number 254 value 251 one 243 labourer 243 case 237 fact 229 state 228 week 225 condition 221 nation 217 nothing 215 wage 212 friend 195 freedom 192 capital 184 soil 184 manufacture Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 1294 _ 509 England 284 Mr. 196 India 183 Gibson 181 Ireland 160 Stephenson 156 George 145 London 142 Herschel 139 Edward 136 Garfield 132 Telford 116 States 100 Millet 98 John 91 yo 91 Lancashire 86 William 86 United 84 Liverpool 84 God 78 Socialist 77 Roosevelt 77 Europe 76 Germany 74 Rome 71 Manchester 69 Smith 68 New 66 West 66 Tam 66 James 66 America 65 Britain 64 wi 63 North 60 Scotland 60 Jamaica 59 Virginia 55 Russia 55 Great 54 Bath 53 France 52 Ohio 51 Lord 51 House 51 English 50 Dr. 50 CHAPTER Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3627 he 3432 it 1872 they 1485 i 1349 we 1016 them 1011 him 617 you 571 she 451 himself 326 me 314 themselves 299 us 169 her 113 itself 62 ''em 56 one 48 herself 34 ourselves 25 myself 13 thee 13 ''s 9 yourself 9 mine 7 his 6 o 5 ye 4 yours 4 yo 4 iv 4 hers 4 described:-- 3 ours 3 ay 3 aw 2 thyself 2 theirs 2 hoo''ll 2 ha 2 em 1 yourselves 1 whereof 1 we''n 1 th 1 on''t 1 mo 1 maintained,--as 1 it,--aw''ll 1 exports--_itself 1 4s Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 14740 be 4782 have 1175 do 877 make 817 say 705 see 621 go 578 find 513 come 511 take 495 give 486 work 451 become 438 know 376 look 338 increase 303 get 300 pay 279 live 266 call 248 follow 244 grow 243 tell 243 bring 232 think 231 produce 230 obtain 227 tend 227 sell 220 leave 220 begin 217 keep 205 show 205 enable 204 raise 183 send 180 carry 176 stand 176 pass 168 require 167 feel 166 employ 165 bear 159 put 157 need 154 turn 151 use 149 receive 148 seem 148 continue Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 2016 not 1239 more 1137 great 1052 so 920 now 753 other 666 very 651 only 651 little 587 poor 559 own 506 up 501 well 462 good 461 then 452 much 441 such 440 as 436 old 436 many 431 first 427 long 426 most 423 thus 412 large 386 even 375 same 371 out 359 small 359 here 350 less 331 almost 320 young 320 last 314 never 312 whole 307 still 299 few 287 there 264 high 255 always 251 yet 250 too 246 however 238 once 235 new 232 ever 230 far 213 free 206 cheap Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 132 good 90 most 83 great 64 least 48 high 28 rich 24 poor 21 fine 19 early 17 large 16 bad 15 low 13 eld 11 young 11 small 11 rude 11 Most 10 slight 9 near 9 manif 8 true 8 late 8 deep 7 old 6 noble 5 wild 5 heavy 5 dear 4 cheap 3 strong 3 simple 3 rare 3 lofty 3 happy 3 common 3 busy 3 bright 3 base 2 wealthy 2 weak 2 sturdy 2 steady 2 ready 2 quiet 2 owd 2 nice 2 needy 2 mean 2 meagre 2 keen Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 336 most 17 well 15 least 1 worst 1 quoted:-- 1 near Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.mouldingname.info 1 gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.mouldingname.info/00.html 1 http://gallica.bnf.fr Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 _ are _ 4 labour is so 4 life is very 4 system called free 4 work is always 4 work is not 3 _ was _ 3 children were all 3 days gone by 3 man becomes more 3 man has always 2 _ did _ 2 _ were _ 2 children are as 2 children are constantly 2 country have almost 2 day went by 2 england is everywhere 2 england is now 2 england is thus 2 england was thus 2 hand was able 2 labour becomes more 2 labour is not 2 labour is now 2 labour is valueless 2 land be impoverished 2 land becomes more 2 land is not 2 land was still 2 lands are now 2 life came gently 2 life does not 2 life had always 2 life is always 2 life is far 2 life is not 2 life is often 2 life was not 2 life were mainly 2 lives is almost 2 man being already 2 man had necessarily 2 man had never 2 man has everywhere 2 man is almost 2 man is not 2 man is so 2 man was instrumental 2 man was just Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 life was not merely 2 man is not ashamed 2 time was not entirely 2 work was no mere 2 world has not yet 1 _ be no improvement 1 _ did not _ 1 child does not necessarily 1 children are not yet 1 class have not yet 1 labour has no existence 1 labour is not so 1 lands is not only 1 men do not voluntarily 1 men found no demand 1 men have no market 1 men is no longer 1 system was not only 1 things has no parallel 1 time are not able 1 women had no choice 1 work is not half 1 work is not remunerative 1 work is not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 4529 author = Allen, Grant title = Biographies of Working Men date = keywords = Bath; Edward; England; Garfield; George; Gibson; Herschel; Liverpool; London; Millet; Mr.; Rome; Stephenson; Tam; Telford; William; man; work summary = and learn how men and masons went about their work in the busy centres Fully to describe the great work which the mature engineer constructed memorials of Telford''s great and useful life; impossible to read the invention, like all other great inventions, was not the work of one day Killingworth some day and see my engine at work," said Stephenson, From the day that Gibson arrived at man''s estate, the great dream of help regretting when he saw other men turning out work of such great works), at a paying price, too, which was a great point for the young certainly started in life far better equipped than most working men''s Hard as he worked, little Francois'' time was not entirely taken up with great painter." He accepted Millet as his pupil; and the young man set inventions and engineering works; or, again, like Herschel and and began life in earnest as a working man. id = 6492 author = Allen, Grant title = Biographies of Working Men date = keywords = Bath; Edward; England; Garfield; George; Gibson; Herschel; Liverpool; London; Millet; Mr.; Rome; Stephenson; Tam; Telford; William; great; man; work summary = learn how men and masons went about their work in the busy centres of Fully to describe the great work which the mature engineer constructed memorials of Telford''s great and useful life; impossible to read the great inventions, was not the work of one day or one man. day and see my engine at work," said Stephenson, confidently; "and if humble origin--working men who have introduced great improvements in From the day that Gibson arrived at man''s estate, the great dream of help regretting when he saw other men turning out work of such great certainly started in life far better equipped than most working men''s Hard as he worked, little Francois'' time was not entirely taken up with town, where he was able to do three hours'' work out of school time inventions and engineering works; or, again, like Herschel and and began life in earnest as a working man. id = 13322 author = Barnard, William Francis title = The Tongues of Toil And Other Poems date = keywords = hand; life; man summary = The power of your hands it falls at last, Strong men of all the world! The hangman''s hands are dyed with blood, The hangman''s heart is dead; Dead lives that know not childhoods grace, Life was formed by labor: The potent powers of earth and sea, Your lust of power, the debtors tears, cold You shall not hand hate''s baneful drink, and shall fill the earth. Symbol of love and of life made free. But thou are the flag of the world, of Man. Red as the blood of freedom''s dead, Thou art no new thing; thou hast waved from of old. Thou hast seen the day be born from the night; Thou hast buttressed the heart and stiffened the hand Are myriads more than all of thy dead. Of evil days and acts which curse the land. And bind life down with bonds as strong as steel, He knows the men who toil, id = 8000 author = Carey, Henry Charles title = The Slave Trade, Domestic and Foreign Why It Exists, and How It May Be Extinguished date = keywords = Adam; Britain; CHAPTER; England; Europe; Germany; Great; Hindoo; India; Indies; Ireland; Jamaica; London; Mr.; New; North; Russia; Smith; South; States; Turkey; Union; Virginia; West; York; british; country; english; increase; irish; labour; people summary = the improvement of his land, and the returns to labour increase. thus enables men to economize labour and to increase production. land, by men occupying towns and cities placed among the producers. labour from the great and profitable home market, it tended greatly to and exchanging the products of other lands the labour and capital that return to labour, and that as population increased, men were compelled price of that important product of Southern labour and land. The value of land, like that of labour, therefore increases as we pass rights in land acquired by the people of India by all the labour of When the labour market is near, land acquires value and men tendency of prices, whether of land, labour, or their products, is demand for labour in that country drove the poor people to England in produce from that market tends to raising the value of land and labour id = 34012 author = Debs, Eugene V. (Eugene Victor) title = Labor and Freedom: The Voice and Pen of Eugene V. Debs date = keywords = Anthony; Brown; Bryan; Coppock; Jesus; John; Roosevelt; Socialist; States; Theodore; United; class; democratic; man; party; republican; work; worker summary = party is the economic organization of the working class. terms and cast a united vote for the party of their class as the forces working class politics that there is between capitalism and Socialism. to perpetuate class rule and the Socialist party organized and financed and for the first time the Socialists of the United States have a party In the name of the workers the Socialist party condemns the capitalist capitalist parties, creating a new issue, and driving the working class Socialist party the working class. the capitalist class character of the Republican and Democratic parties working class in this campaign and the only party that has a moral right The Socialist party being the political expression of the rising working The economic organization and the political party of the working class workers come in the Socialist party. The working class is in politics this year. id = 5887 author = Vaknin, Samuel title = The Labor Divide date = keywords = RTF summary = Copyright (C) 2007 by Lidija Rangelovska. Please see the corresponding RTF file for this eBook. RTF is Rich Text Format, and is readable in nearly any modern word processing program. id = 10126 author = Waugh, Edwin title = Home-Life of the Lancashire Factory Folk during the Cotton Famine date = keywords = CHAPTER; Committee; God; John; Lancashire; Lord; Preston; Relief; Street; Wigan; day; know; little; look; man; old; poor; time; woman; work summary = said to me, "Hard work being there." In one case, a poor, pale, old man was relieved at once; but, as he walked away, he looked hard of times--a very poor trade--since the days when tattered old "Jem arranging the little empty things in this way looked almost like the are a family of 3 the man work four or more days per week on the moor the woman works 6 days per week at Messrs Simpsons North Road man himself had got a few days'' work in that time. companion, "let us have a look at old John." A gray-headed little (Here the old man gave her a quiet, approving look, like a good After a little more talk, we bade the old couple good day, and went "Well," said the old woman, sitting down, "things is quare with us The old woman said, "My daughter has been eawt o'' work a long time.